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View Full Version : Lightroom Playground Week 9 - Comments & Questions


bayhli
February 12th, 2008, 10:45 AM
Please use this thread to post your comments and questions for LR Playground Week 9.

Link back to the original photo: here (http://www.elementsvillage.com/forums/showthread.php?t=34526)

Edmund
February 13th, 2008, 11:23 AM
After I posted my image for week -9, I noticed that the horizon is slightly off so if I were to go back and re-edit more The first thing I would do is to straighten out the horizon by dragging a straight line fron left to right across the screen to include the roof of the little cabin. It's not off by much but would add to the image.
Eddie:)

bayhli
February 13th, 2008, 01:28 PM
Hi Eddie,

A straight horizon is one of the first things I notice in my images, so I knew this one was crooked and noticed that you didn't straighten it the first time around. :) I cheated and took out the dust spots though before posting it!

Having snow for five months of the year I'm getting pretty good with the exposure; I use the simple method of adding exposure compensation, beginning with +1 and altering it depending on what the histogram is doing.

However, when I look back at this image (this is last winter's photo and everything was practice), there is no exposure compensation at all and the settings are quite strange. I took many shots before this one and all of them had exposure comp added but the histogram is sliding up the right side, so I had the blinkies and kept reducing it and in the end didn't use any EC. So I don't know why this one worked - perhaps the sky and the trees balanced the light with matrix metering? Interesting...

Here's the metadata:
f8.0
1/500 sec
ISO 100
EC: 0
Matrix metering
Aperture Priority Mode
94mm with 70-200mm lens

I'd certainly be interested in your further comments.

Edmund
February 16th, 2008, 02:51 PM
Pat, I have noticed with my Nikon D-80 that when all things are equal ie beautiful blue sky, sunny, I can use matrix metering and it is right on but I usually go with -1/3 stop compensation to keep my highlights. Who knows maybe with a equal amount of sky ,trees, and foreground snow it was nailed to be correct as is.
Eddie:)

Chuck S.
February 16th, 2008, 03:11 PM
Eddie, I almost always use a -1/3 EC on my cameras; keeps those skies from blowing out most of the time.

bayhli
February 17th, 2008, 05:03 PM
Ed & Chuck, I'll have to remember that -1/3 comp if I ever see green earth again - I assume you guys mean you use it without any snow present.

Julie, nice of you to comment about "snowflakes" on my lens but no that would have been dust spots I missed cloning out before posting the image! LOL I was nervous about cleaning the sensor the first time so kept putting it off and it got really bad - it finally was taking me so long to clean up my images I braved up and cleaned it.

Everyone was pretty creative with this image - enjoyed seeing all the ideas. Eddie you sure did a nice job of drawing out the warmth in the image - I developed mine similarly with the help of a cloudy white balance but it is lacking when I look at what you did. Nice job!

Chuck S.
February 17th, 2008, 05:28 PM
Ed & Chuck, I'll have to remember that -1/3 comp if I ever see green earth again - I assume you guys mean you use it without any snow present.



Snow? What is snow?? :twisted:

p.s. Yes, I use the -1/3 compensation for normal scenes not involving snow.....:)

bayhli
February 17th, 2008, 09:10 PM
You devil is right Chuck! I see that Texas location - God, I don't want to even think about the heat you are getting at this weary stage of winter!

I think Eddie might see a few flakes here and there... ??

Chuck S.
February 17th, 2008, 09:38 PM
Pat, it's about 20 degrees here right now.....Celsius!

But just wait until I'm sweltering in the oppressive heat and humidity from May until October....then we'll see who gets the last laugh!

bayhli
February 18th, 2008, 05:33 PM
Chuck,

20 degrees Celsius...... "JUST SHOOT ME NOW" !!! :p